Leroy Boulder wants a toolbox just like his Dad. One day he visits the industrial mart and finds an angry toolbox sitting alone on a shelf. Leroy is intrigued by this toolbox and tries to find out why he is so angry. Leroy discovers that the angry toolbox longed to make friends, to be loved and to be filled with his own tools so that he could help others. The Very Angry Toolbox is a delightful story that is a must-have for all children’s bookshelves. This is the perfect book for discussing feelings and emotions and considering the impact that our feelings have on others.
The Very Angry Toolbox
$5.99
Leroy Boulder dreams of owning a toolbox just like his Dad’s. One day, while exploring the industrial mart, he comes across an angry toolbox sitting by itself on a shelf. Intrigued, Leroy sets out to uncover the reasons behind the toolbox’s anger. Through his investigation, Leroy learns that the angry toolbox yearns for friendship, love, and the chance to be filled with tools to aid others. “The Very Angry Toolbox” is a charming tale that deserves a place on every child’s bookshelf. It serves as a valuable tool for discussing emotions and their impact on others, making it an essential read for young readers.
Categories: | Children's Book, Coming of Age Fiction |
---|---|
Tags: | Children's Books, Emotions & Feelings, Facts of Life, Growing Up |
book-author |
---|
Related products
-
A Day of Pride: A Children’s Book that Celebrates Diversity, Equality and Tolerance!
Are you interested in teaching your kid the beauty of diversity and differences among us?
Do you believe in LGBTQ rights and equality for all?
A Day of Pride is the perfect children’s book for you and your kid!It is a colorful day of celebration. Soon, the streets will be filled with people of all kinds, who will march in the festive Pride Parade. Miss Rainbow is ready to paint the city with her hues and colors, to fill every corner with love and pride. When the Witch of Shame appears, she threatens to ruin the great party.
-
Damsel, Not Distressed
Damsel, Not Distressed, the first of the series, is a fantasy novel set in the future with a long-standing war between the old faith and the new world of technology and science. The book follows two teenagers, Kieran Endi and Skylar Locklear, from different upbringings, beliefs, morals, and family histories. The audience is for older teens and young adults. Similar books are Divergent Series, Hunger Games Series, The Giver, The Maze Runner Series, and dystopian literatures alike. The thrills and tensions of what the future holds leaves us anxious in anticipation. One thing for certain, is that the stories seem to point to the world being far worse than the original plans of a utopia.
Four hundred years from now, there will be a world consisting of four remaining countries each governed by their respective militaries where religion, freedom, and poverty are a thing of the past. Kieran Endi and her grandparents are in a new country, Bulwark, amongst a population that is fond of this system of obedience and tyranny. Her family roots share the knowledge of the past taught by the first ancestors, much to the militaries’ dismay. She lives an unstable life on the run, because in these times persons of faith outside of the government, are considered rebels and that leads to deadly consequences.
-
Who Colored the Leaves?: A Bedtime Story for Children (and grown-ups too!)
Join Grandpa and his three mischievous granddaughters-Josie, Emily, and Claire-on their wonderful storytelling journey. Discover the magical story of nature’s greatest collaboration in “Who Colored the Leaves?”-a comforting bedtime story that will capture both children and the child in every adult. The amazing book is full of love, laughter, and the age-old art of storytelling, which soothes children to sleep while filling their dreams with wonder.
-
Crimes and Impunity in New Orleans
Crimes and Impunity in New Orleans” is author Sherrie Miranda’s prequel to her page-turner, debut thriller, “Secrets and Lies in El Salvador”. Shelly Dalton Smith is a naĂŻve, twenty-three-year-old from Upstate New York who moves to New Orleans to prepare for a photo project in war-torn El Salvador. Shelly arrives in New Orleans, broken and traumatized and therefore unable to trust her own instincts. New Orleans represents the fresh start Shelly needs, but she soon finds that almost everyone in New Orleans harbors a secret.
She’s unprepared for life in “The Big Easy,” and her world is turned upside down as she navigates “the city that care forgot.” With fast-paced chapters and beautifully detailed conversations and descriptions, we see New Orleans through Shelly’s innocent eyes as she realizes the sheltered life she had lived was a lie. She experiences sexism and witnesses racism, police brutality, FBI visits, death threats, and two people’s captivity by her former boss.
Through her misadventures and exciting plot twists, Shelly focuses on fighting injustice, ultimately finding her authentic voice as an empowered adult. When she finally leaves New Orleans, she is forever changed. The novel is a wild ride through the underbelly of 1980s New Orleans and is filled with quirky characters, sinister abusers, and thrilling secrets and revelations. -
No Lifeguard on Duty: A Novel
In the summer of 1970, racial unrest in Asbury Park sends three teenage friends into turmoil.
It’s July of 1970. The decaying beach town of Asbury Park, New Jersey erupts with racial unrest that propels three unlikely teenage friends into turmoil. Adam, Mollie, and Howard struggle with family conflicts and their racial, cultural and class identities in the midst of the chaos. Town and teens will never be the same.
When the smoke clears, secrets that brought the trio to this fateful time and place are revealed and continue to intertwine their lives in the years to come. The boardwalk and beaches become the setting for personal revelations, encounters with the dark side of human nature, and brushes with the supernatural.
No Lifeguard on Duty will stir a range of emotions and its nuanced treatment of race and class is as relevant today as it was in 1970.
-
We Met a Police Officer Today: A Children’s Picture Book About Facing Fear for Kids Ages 4-8 (Fearless Friends 2)
We Met a Police Officer Today empowers young minds with a positive perspective on law enforcement and fosters a deeper understanding of the men and women who dedicate their lives to protecting and serving others. It is not just a picture book – it’s a tool for shaping compassionate citizens, building bridges between law enforcement and the community, and promoting unity and respect.
-
Lion with no roar
In the faraway land of Zamundo, King Geoffie and Queen Safara rule over their kingdom with strength, but also with kindness. Their son, Buptavius, is all set to succeed his father as king but for one problem: he has no roar! Buptavius must also contend with his jealous, scheming uncle, Victus. A heart-warming tale of love, betrayal and redemption, Lion With No Roar follows Buptavius’ coming of age under difficult conditions.
-
What in the World is a Wild Pongo?
Finneas McFarley is uncertain of their existence, but his teacher is convinced otherwise and tasks him with unraveling the mystery. Accompanying Finneas on his journey to the library, we witness his discovery of clues regarding the habitat, diet, and appearance of these mysterious creatures known as wild pongos. As the pieces of the puzzle align, readers are invited to speculate and unravel the enigma of what exactly a wild pongo is.
Be the first to review “The Very Angry Toolbox”